Hello everyone, this is my first post after silently looking at posts on this website since I made the decision to attend law school.

A little about myself, I am currently an MBA student at a USNWR top 15 MBA program and have a military background as an Army Officer. I have been accepted to all the schools mentioned above to study law. I was hoping to get thoughts and opinions on how these schools match up against each other.

If possible, please rank and give reasons for those rankings. I know these are considered peer schools and money is not necessarily a factor yet in which school I will attend. As such, I want to know if money were no object which school would you attend out of the ones I’ve mentioned?

keepingitcool wrote:Hello everyone, this is my first post after silently looking at posts on this website since I made the decision to attend law school.

A little about myself, I am currently an MBA student at a USNWR top 15 MBA program and have a military background as an Army Officer. I have been accepted to all the schools mentioned above to study law. I was hoping to get thoughts and opinions on how these schools match up against each other.

If possible, please rank and give reasons for those rankings. I know these are considered peer schools and money is not necessarily a factor yet in which school I will attend. As such, I want to know if money were no object which school would you attend out of the ones I’ve mentioned?

Thanks in advance for your responses!

1. Illinois2. Minnesota3. Iowa4. Wisconsin5. Indiana

The reason I put Indiana fifth is because they're ranked artificially high.

Again, scholarships could be a game-changer. It aslo depends on where you want to live afterwards.

keepingitcool wrote:Hello everyone, this is my first post after silently looking at posts on this website since I made the decision to attend law school.

A little about myself, I am currently an MBA student at a USNWR top 15 MBA program and have a military background as an Army Officer. I have been accepted to all the schools mentioned above to study law. I was hoping to get thoughts and opinions on how these schools match up against each other.

If possible, please rank and give reasons for those rankings. I know these are considered peer schools and money is not necessarily a factor yet in which school I will attend. As such, I want to know if money were no object which school would you attend out of the ones I’ve mentioned?

Thanks in advance for your responses!

1. Illinois2. Minnesota3. Iowa4. Wisconsin5. Indiana

The reason I put Indiana fifth is because they're ranked artificially high.

Again, scholarships could be a game-changer. It aslo depends on where you want to live afterwards.

This looks about right. I'd switch Indiana and Wisconsin, but I guess no reason to go that low on the list anyway.

tamlyric wrote:Thanks for the thread! I am interested to see what people say.

No problem. I know, after viewing the acceptance threads, that there are a number of people that have acceptances to a few of these schools and will have a tough time picking which one to attend. These schools all compete in the same region, so I want to know how others perceive these schools.

These schools are essentially identical with the only difference being the state (their primary market). Illinois and Indiana have deceptive rankings. Indiana because of a large one-time money gift - seriously - and Illinois by raising its numbers far faster than its reputation, as the 2009 recruiting season proved.

The ordinary advice is (1) go to your home-state school; (2) go to the one in the state you want to practice; (3) go to the one with the best deal.

With money no object, I would visit all of them and go to the one I liked best.

Go to the cheapest. I'm not sure if I should LAUGH or get MAD at people who try to objectively rank these schools, as if someone will make a life changing decision because Minnesota is a tiny bit better than Iowa. They're all peers. Good, regional, midwestern schools. You're getting shut out of Biglaw at all of these schools ITE, excluding the top 10-15-20%, MAYBE.

BobDole34 wrote:Go to the cheapest. I'm not sure if I should LAUGH or get MAD at people who try to objectively rank these schools, as if someone will make a life changing decision because Minnesota is a tiny bit better than Iowa. They're all peers. Good, regional, midwestern schools. You're getting shut out of Biglaw at all of these schools ITE, excluding the top 10-15-20%, MAYBE.

I'd rank Illinois above the rest only because it places into Chicago biglaw, a major market. But use I use the term places very loosely, since you are right its top 10%. Its certainly not better at teaching law, it just lucks out because of Chicago.

The thing about the T1 Midwestern state schools is they really only place in their own state. The OP needs to decide which state they want to live in and go to that school. They are peers, but they aren't interchangeable.

In terms of scholarship, I'd negotiate. They all know they are peers and should match.

It seems like Minnesota is a great school but it gets trumped by U of I's ties to Chicago. (I've seen stats)WI seems to be more popular for some reason, artificial or otherwise, I have no idea. (part stats and TLS hearsay)IA and IU-B seem to be struggling right now as far as placing in Chicago (that is based purely on TLS anecdotes).

The top two are pretty well solid, imo. The bottom three are pretty close. I got full scholarships from both Indiana and Iowa and I chose to attend Indiana. Wisconsin is fairly close to them, and will definitely be best if you want to practice in Madison or Milwaukee, but just doesn't have the national (what little there is in the 20-30 range) or regional reach that Indiana and Iowa seem to have.

ScaredWorkedBored wrote:These schools are essentially identical with the only difference being the state (their primary market). Illinois and Indiana have deceptive rankings. Indiana because of a large one-time money gift - seriously - and Illinois by raising its numbers far faster than its reputation, as the 2009 recruiting season proved.

The ordinary advice is (1) go to your home-state school; (2) go to the one in the state you want to practice; (3) go to the one with the best deal.

With money no object, I would visit all of them and go to the one I liked best.

Actually this really isn't true. UIUC has historically been a T20-25 school (they were ~17-18 for a long time), and only in the last 5 or so years did it slip, before coming back up.

If I had to rank them, I would probably say:1: UMN/UIUC2. UW3: IUB4: UI

Well, professor movement is sometimes a good indication of school quality. They have a good grasp of the relative strengths of a law school and, absent tenure track reasons or a position as a Dean, Professors rarely move downward in terms of prestige. So through that prism, Iowa clearly seems to be suffering right now, as they've lost some major professors recently. (One to IU, one to Wash U).

It's also interesting to me that Illinois just lost a professor to Alabama.

Do you know how to read? The argument made is that two of the schools are somehow more national than the third when they're all regional.

That said, citing Princeton Review for law school placement might be even dumber than not understanding how to debunk the posed argument.

They're all regional. That's the point. I was supporting you. And whats wrong with using Princeton Review for geographic placement? They use school reported info, so they're flawed in the same way every school's self-reporting statistics are: unreliable for actually expected salaries, but not for geographic placement. I'm sorry your vagina bleeds so heavily for Wisconsin.

They're all the same. Perhaps Illinois has a slight leg up because its "native market" is Chicago. However, that can cut either way--your "native market" is far more saturated than Wisconsin's, or Minnesota's.

If your priority is: 1.) Coasts; 2.) Chicago; 3.) anywhere else (and you don't care where "anywhere else") is, I might say the most logical choice is Minnesota, because it the Minneapolis market is larger than Wisconsin/Indiana/Iowa, and you aren't at such over-saturation levels as you are at Chicago.

All of the schools you mention are equal at the coasts (low chance) and in Chicago.